Hey @trailanimal -- thanks for the love bombs!
<3 <3 <3

Thought you'd be in hibernation for a while.
Hope you're keeping warm and well fed,
and the wolves aren't howling at your door.

Looking forward to what you'll bring us in spring.
Some of us kind of have to develop our own strains, I guess.

I'm most looking forward to some C99,
and related outdoor strains, mold resistant,
from Female Seeds, in the coming months.

These plants here are just some fun in the meantime.
May pull a gram or two from them, though.

It's been wet again for a few days.
Couple of inches of rain. But sun coming up.
And then temps will be from about 13C - 25C already.
The coldest part of winter already passed.

Not sure when the snow melts in Alaska Land.
I'm sure you're looking forward to it!
 
Hey @trailanimal -- thanks for the love bombs!
<3 <3 <3

Thought you'd be in hibernation for a while.
Hope you're keeping warm and well fed,
and the wolves aren't howling at your door.

Looking forward to what you'll bring us in spring.
Some of us kind of have to develop our own strains, I guess.

I'm most looking forward to some C99,
and related outdoor strains, mold resistant,
from Female Seeds, in the coming months.

These plants here are just some fun in the meantime.
May pull a gram or two from them, though.

It's been wet again for a few days.
Couple of inches of rain. But sun coming up.
And then temps will be from about 13C - 25C already.
The coldest part of winter already passed.

Not sure when the snow melts in Alaska Land.
I'm sure you're looking forward to it!
going to be awhile, usually snow melts in the valley, most of it, by the first of June, I'm glad I have the window and all those snow reflected photons
P1010392.JPG
 
I'm going out this weekend to plant a bunch of mint and nettle seeds at my new grow location. It got partially logged which was both a plus and minus. On the plus side the thinning opened up a lot more fertile ground and sunshine. On the minus side all of the wild fennel and sumac that I used for cover got taken out, so now I need a new screen crop.

I'm also going to hand bore a well in a dry creek bottom for a warm weather water supply. I'll be dropping seeds in early march and hopefully have them in the ground by April fools. I have the opposite problem of @trailanimal here in Tejas.
 
I'm going out this weekend to plant a bunch of mint and nettle seeds at my new grow location. It got partially logged which was both a plus and minus. On the plus side the thinning opened up a lot more fertile ground and sunshine. On the minus side all of the wild fennel and sumac that I used for cover got taken out, so now I need a new screen crop.

I'm also going to hand bore a well in a dry creek bottom for a warm weather water supply. I'll be dropping seeds in early march and hopefully have them in the ground by April fools. I have the opposite problem of @trailanimal here in Tejas.
cheers grobro! nettles sound like a dandy cover crop:thumbsup::pass:
 
I'm going out this weekend to plant a bunch of mint and nettle seeds at my new grow location. It got partially logged which was both a plus and minus.

Happy planting. I'm often worried that the park maintenance people will come through
and just mow everything down. Last season, I lost a few of my Safaris when
gardeners came through and prepped the raised beds in spring.
It was a few nice plants worth...
So, at least they do the logging now, rather than after you've settled in...

On the plus side the thinning opened up a lot more fertile ground and sunshine. On the minus side all of the wild fennel and sumac that I used for cover got taken out, so now I need a new screen crop.

Think of the plus side, rather than the minus.
I'm sure some nice cover will start naturally anyway.
Though mint and nettles sounds great!
Can you eat the fennel? :D

I'm also going to hand bore a well in a dry creek bottom for a warm weather water supply. I'll be dropping seeds in early march and hopefully have them in the ground by April fools. I have the opposite problem of @trailanimal here in Tejas.

Some serious work there boring a well.
All the best for that!
You'll be doing a full journal here at AFN?
 
cheers grobro! nettles sound like a dandy cover crop:thumbsup::pass:

Where I'm visiting right now, they have a non-native little bush,
can't remember the name, but it's like nettles, very thorny and stubborn.
Grows about up to maybe 2m = 6' tall or so.
Perfect for planting amidst, so long as the herb doesn't get too high...
How big do the nettles get?
 
Where I'm visiting right now, they have a non-native little bush,
can't remember the name, but it's like nettles, very thorny and stubborn.
Grows about up to maybe 2m = 6' tall or so.
Perfect for planting amidst, so long as the herb doesn't get too high...
How big do the nettles get?
in Montana 3' +
 
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